This week on Exploration, the biographies of Wernher Von Braun and Heinz Haber, scientists who worked for Hitler during World War II, are explored.

From Wikipedia:

After studying physics in Leipzig, Heidelberg and Berlin and obtaining his doctorate, Heinz Haber served in World War II for the German Luftwaffe as a reconnaissance aviator until 1942. He returned to the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Physik and spent much of World War II conducting research on high-speed, high-altitude flight for the Luftwaffe Institute for Aviation Medicine. In order to assess the risks faced by German air force pilots, the institute performed experiments on hundreds of inmates at the Dachau concentration camp near Munich. The inmates who survived these experiments were usually killed and then dissected.

In 1952, he became associate physicist at the University of California, Los Angeles; in the 1950s, Haber eventually became the chief scientific consultant to Walt Disney productions. He later co-hosted Disney’s Man in Space with von Braun. When the Eisenhower administration asked Disney to produce a show championing the civilian use of nuclear power, Heinz Haber was given the assignment. He hosted the Disney broadcast called Our Friend the Atom and wrote a popular children’s book with the same title, both of which explained nuclear fission and fusion in simple terms. General Dynamics, a manufacturer of nuclear reactors, sponsored Our Friend the Atom and the nuclear submarine ride at Disneyland’s Tomorrowland.[3]

Scientists Who Worked for Hitler

This week on Exploration, the biographies of Wernher Von Braun and Heinz Haber, scientists who worked for Hitler during World War II, are explored.

From Wikipedia:

After studying physics in Leipzig, Heidelberg and Berlin and obtaining his doctorate, Heinz Haber served in World War II for the German Luftwaffe as a reconnaissance aviator until 1942. He returned to the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Physik and spent much of World War II conducting research on high-speed, high-altitude flight for the Luftwaffe Institute for Aviation Medicine. In order to assess the risks faced by German air force pilots, the institute performed experiments on hundreds of inmates at the Dachau concentration camp near Munich. The inmates who survived these experiments were usually killed and then dissected.

In 1952, he became associate physicist at the University of California, Los Angeles; in the 1950s, Haber eventually became the chief scientific consultant to Walt Disney productions. He later co-hosted Disney’s Man in Space with von Braun. When the Eisenhower administration asked Disney to produce a show championing the civilian use of nuclear power, Heinz Haber was given the assignment. He hosted the Disney broadcast called Our Friend the Atom and wrote a popular children’s book with the same title, both of which explained nuclear fission and fusion in simple terms. General Dynamics, a manufacturer of nuclear reactors, sponsored Our Friend the Atom and the nuclear submarine ride at Disneyland’s Tomorrowland.[3]

Current Show

Upcoming Shows

Upcoming Events

Join us on Sunday, August 2nd, on the Patio at Californos Westport for the 4th edition of this amazing benefit for 90.1 FM KKFI! If you love great music and support your community radio station, please help us continue to …

Join us on Sunday, Sept 6th, on the Patio at Californos Westport for the 5th and final edition, for 2015, of this amazing benefit for 90.1 FM KKFI! If you love great music and support your community radio station, …

ADVANCE TICKET CLICK HERE 90.1FM KKFI is very proud to present Kansas City’s own Kelley Hunt. We appreciate Kelley for her continued support of Kansas City Community Radio and her tireless work to educate the next generation and for spreading …

Sprint Presents: 90.1FM Crossroads Music Fest A Benefit for 90.1FM KKFI Kansas City Community Radio This 11th Annual Festival is a Celebration of Kansas City Music with some talent from around the Midwest. Saturday September 12th, 2015 6pm to 2am …